Locked out of the dorm – a long cry for help (sorry)

anthony-clarke

Registered
Hi kids

I'm posting this from OS9.2 on a titanium powerbook 667mhz because I've locked myself out of OS X 10.2.1 (both systems on a single partition).

And I want to get back in.

The story so far (as briefly as possible) . . .

I was logged in as administrator and setting user privileges for my son's account in OS X. Then separately, I used the 'get info' command from the drop down menu to lock an external 30GB LaCie Pocket Drive firewire hard disk; this was because the user acount capabilities did not seem to extend to this drive – ie all the files on were still accessible (I'm a little hazy on the exact terminology here because, since I am locked out, I may be confusing the terms between OS X and 9.2).

Well anyway, limiting read/write privileges on the external disk to just me as administrator did the trick. No problem so far.

Naturally I went a step too far and decided to apply the same process to the internal hard disk. I made myself the owner and only I had read/write privileges. I logged out.

Then, and you can see what's coming, I tried to log in as my son and failed miserably to do so – the progress rainbow just glowed at me smugly.

Restarting put me into a blue screen with spinning rainbow or a command line screen which invited me to login. Which, of course, I failed to do (it did not like my login name/password). In any event, even if I had managed to log in, I would not have had the faintest idea what to do.

The next step was to restart and Cmd S into the single user shell and . . . well I'm at the extreme limit of my knowledge here; I've browsed 'most everywhere to see if someone has posted a solution to the problem but I've not seen it replicated.

So here I am in OS 9.2.2 and it's rather like an old girlfriend that I still like but no longer fancy.

Any advice gratefully accepted – I really don't want to have to build the system from scratch.

Thanks in advance

Anthony



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you should be able to boot from your os x 10.2 install disk and launch disk utility from the installer menu. from there you can run 'repair permissions' which should take you back to where you started
 
Dear Edx

Thanks for the advice: it worked. When I wrote before, I was using my OS X 10.1.5 CD which did not have the 'repair disk permissions' option. On starting up with the 10.2 CD....oh yessss.

Yours in relief

Anthony
 
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